Imogen Holst CONDUCTS Two Songs without Words A Fugal Concerto Gustav Holst Golden Goose - Ballet Music Nocturne Double Concerto Lyric Movement Brook Green Suite Capriccio William Bennett • Peter Graeme Cecil Aronowitz • Emmanuel Hurwitz Kenneth Sillito ENGLISH CHAMBER ORCHESTRA SRCD.223 STEREO ADD The Brook Green Suite was written in 1933 for the junior orchestra of St. Paul's Girls' School in Brook Green, London. It was first performed by the dedicatees at an informal school concert in March 1934, two months before my father's death. The short Prelude is founded on the descending scale of C major. In the slow Air the flowing lines of melody are GUSTAV HOLST (1874 - 1934) a link between the language of English folk song and the enharmonic counterpoint of my father's last works. The Dance, a cheerful jig, borrows a puppet show's tune that he once Two Songs without Words Op. 22 (1906) (8’03”) heard during a holiday in Sicily. 1 Country Song (4'26") 2 Marching Song (3'37") In 1932, when my father was Lecturer in composition at Harvard University, he was asked by a New York conductor to write "a short radio piece for Concert Band" for a series Fugal Concerto for Flute, Oboe & Strings Op. 40 No. 2 (1923)* (8’04”) of programmes founded on folk music themes. For some reason he wrote it on a tune of his 3 I Moderato (2'13") 4 II Adagio (2'50") 5 III Allegro (3'01") own, so it was not performed in the series. He never revised the unnamed work, but this may 6 Ballet Music from The Golden Goose Op. 45 No.1 (1926, 1969) (14’51”) have been because he had too many other things to write during the last two years of his life, when he was having to spend a good deal of time in hospital.The manuscript score has been 7 Nocturne (A Moorside Suite 1928) Arr strings Holst* (6’36”) in the British Museum since 1952. In 1967 I had another look at this 'Jazz band piece' and Double Concerto for two Violins and Orchestra Op. 49 (1929) (14’23”) decided to adjust it for orchestra, giving the saxophone parts to cor anglais and bass 8 I Scherzo (4'57") 9 II Lament (4'07") clarinet, and allowing the three cornets to become three trumpets. It was first performed by 10 III Variations on a Ground (5'19") the English Chamber Orchestra at the Queen Elizabeth Hall on January 10th, 1968. I have named it Capriccio in spite of the expressive quasi-folk song with which it opens, because 11 Lyric Movement for Viola and small Orchestra (1933)* (9’57”) from the very moment when the Marimba makes its first animated utterance, there can be Brook Green Suite for Strings (1933)* (7’12”) no question about the mood of the music. 12 I Prelude (1'52") 13 II Air (2'34") 14 III Dance (2'46") IMOGEN HOLST 15 Capriccio for Orchestra (1933) Edt Imogen Holst (1968) (6’02”) www.lyrita.co.uk (75’11”) William Bennett (flute) • Peter Graeme (oboe) Notes © 1970 & 1992 G & I Holst Ltd and 1967 Lyrita Recorded Edition, England Cecil Aronowitz (viola) Copyright Lyrita photos of Imogen Holst by HANS WILD. Photo of Holst courtesy G & I, Holst. Design by KEITH HENSBY Emmanuel Hurwitz & Kenneth Sillito (violins) Also available on Lyrita CD: English Chamber Orchestra Holst: Fugal Overture, Somerset Rhapsody, Beni Mora, Hammersmith, Japanese Suite, Scherzo Imogen Holst LPO/LSO. Boult SRCD.222 The above individual timings will normally each include two pauses. One before the beginning of each movement or work, and one after the end. WARNING Copyright subsists in all Lyrita Recordings. Any unauthorised broadcasting. public performance, copying, rental or re-recording thereof in any manner whatsoever will constitute an ൿ 1970 * ൿ 1967 The copyright in these sound recordings is owned by Lyrita Recorded Edition, England. infringement of such copyright. In the United Kingdom licences for the use of recordings for public This compilation and digital remastering ൿ 1992 Lyrita Recorded Edition, England. performance may be obtained from Phonographic Performance Ltd., 1 Upper James Street, London, © 1992 Lyrita Recorded Edition, England. Lyrita is a registered trade mark. Made in the UK W1F 9DE LYRITA RECORDED EDITION. Produced under an exclusive license from Lyrita 7 by Wyastone Estate Ltd, PO Box 87, Monmouth, NP25 3WX, UK beadle are among other victims who are drawn into the dance against their will. The Princess laughs; the King congratulates Jack; the wedding procession forms and moves off nyone who saw Imogen Holst conducting will have retained a vivid picture of someone into the castle, where a trumpeter can be heard playing on the battlements; and finally the Awho was totally committed to the music. Her small figure literally danced on the Magician waves his wand and disappears. podium, conveying an irresistible sense of enthusiasm and an exhilarating rhythmic vivacity. These qualities made her the perfect advocate for her father's music, although it While going through my father's manuscripts which he left unfinished at the time of was perhaps as a choral conductor that she was in her element (and particularly when his death I came across his almost completed arrangement for strings of his Moorside Suite working with amateurs, whom she was able to galvanise into standards of performance that for brass band, written in 1928. The slow movement, Nocturne, is particularly suitable for they did not know they could achieve). But she was equally at home with professionals, from strings, with its quiet singing tone in the phrases for solo quartet and with its tranquil sense the Amadeus Quartet to the English Chamber Orchestra and the massed bands of the Royal of space in the slow tutti procession. Military School of Music at Kneller Hall. Her relationship to her father's music was not My father wrote his Double Concerto in 1929 for his friends Adila Fachiri and Jelly unambiguous. Influenced perhaps by Holst's own wariness of works that were 'too' d'Aranyi, and the first performance was given at a Royal Philharmonic concert at the successful, she was never a whole-hearted admirer of The Planets, and had little time for Queen's Hall on April 3rd, 1930, with the dedicatees as soloists. I have vivid memories of the his early (pre-folk song influenced) works - although towards the end of her life her attitude earliest rehearsals, when I was faced with trying to play the piano reduction with softened and she was happy for much of this music to be published and recorded. But if she simultaneously contrasting key signatures and time signatures. But the bitonality and the was reluctant to encourage performances of works of which she did not think very highly, cross-rhythms soon began to sound effortless and inevitable. (After the first performance she was an untiring advocate of the music of his maturity that she considered to be unjustly my father said: "I felt secretly flattered when an excellent musician complained that my neglected. From 1964 (when she ceased working as Benjamin Britten's assistant) until her two-key writing won't do because it has no 'wrong notes' in it!") The three short movements, death in 1984, most of her energies were devoted to promoting the wider knowledge and which follow without a break, are linked to each other thematically. The Scherzo plunges dissemination of her father's music. abruptly into a restless 6/8 and then becomes calmer and more lyrical as the music leads Although Holst himself was not an especially skilled conductor, he was one of the into a flowing quotation from his 1925 Terzeteo. The Lament begins as an unaccompanied earliest composers to record his own music - the first recording of The Planets was made in duo for the soloists: then the muted orchestral strings join the melancholy dialogue, 1923, and he recorded it again in 1926. Of the music included here Holst only recorded the stretched across four octaves, and the woodwind add their plaintive comments. The last Two Songs without Words - all the other works were first recordings when made in 1966 and echo has scarcely died away before the first solo violinist whisks it into the cheerful staccato 1969 - while arguably the two most important works of his middle years, The Hymn of Jesus of the Variations on a Ground. This is a lively and ingenious movement. Towards the end and Egdon Heath, remained unrecorded until 1944 and 1961 respectively. It seems likely there are expressive quotations from the Lament and the Terzetto tunes, but the timpani that, without Imogen Holst's advocacy, a large proportion of her father's output would have leads the music back to the Ground, and the final crescendo arrives at its climax with a been almost completely neglected. The Golden Goose is an example of a work that had long gesture of good-natured dismissal. disappeared from any kind of repertory until she edited it for this recording. (The same applies to Holst's other 'choral ballet', The Morning of the Year.) Her conviction that the The Lyric Movement for viola and small orchestra is one of the best and least known Lyric Movement was one of Holst's most significant works led to its publication nearly 15 of my father's works. He wrote it in 1933, the last year of his life. In the expressive warmth years after his death, and its subsequent recording has certainly led to its becoming one of of this music he came nearer than in any other work to reaching his own ideal of 'a tender the best known of Holst's late works.
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